5- Yri f lWf BISSI j. n - x t t-j.- ja. Ft i uiiw t-a ra u tg ti-a i-a -,.- kj . ki ra ta - - i. t - -cv t?s f. fra rj r.i p s fa ii na ess t a ti f?i &i a m r( "V Pv5 liJ SlVA fr'S frl KS1 "sH 6.-1 "SiTS B?l S BES K C I , r o 0 OREGON CITY, .OliEGOiT, FJK-IOAX, AUGUST 4L, 1871. no. at. o -4 O G O c o o o 0 O o O O Sljc iUcckln 0ntcimsc. A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, YOll TIIE nuolnoDS "Man, the Farmer Aiol the FAMILY CHICLE. lJ3 Ui:r P'VEKY Fill DAY DT A. fOLTNERi KDITOIl AND rULLlSlIEU. C FFIC El Dr. Thessing's Brick Buil-ling. TERMS of S UP SO RIP TIOX: Gi;i0rI; Copy one year, in advance, S'2 SO TERMS of ADVERTISING : .r.ri-:-;:;t aaveriisemeiu. mtiuimig an S'i. of 12 lines, 1 v.$ 2 50 I'.jv c r.-ii suW.f-iuent insertion I DO i ; jl.i'Ui), one year $120 00 !!,!( " GO , nrrcr " " 40 iVniiiC"--; C;i r..l, 1 square one year 12 l is 'I :;uLl;inrt:' to be made at the risk o S'tj ; ' i and at the expense of Agents. POOE AM) JOB PRINTING. i j" i'iie V.-ii rpiide oSicc U supplied with ', t i:!;"u'. a;; roved styles of type, and mod c -.i M .i C ! 1 1 S K I'HK-SSKS, which will enable h ProiH-ictor to do Job Piiuting at all times Neat, (hiirk and Chvap ! '- St i 1 I w t r i ti-S'ictlvns upon a Specie baxi. J J CSXBSS 1 11 D S. Attorney at Law, Oregon Citj-, Oregon. Sept.lO:ly. oiix :,r. I5ACOX, r ...t n...ir mm T IZ 72 CH5 CIS .13"&. TATioNKilY, rKRFUMKUY. Ac, &c, Orrgon dhj, Oregon. O ;' ' ;.7j t t" .'. old fuid , lately oe- ,,,;. .V. -It-A-'. .., ILiilii street. M tf JOHN FLEMING, - DKAT.F.Il IN ix :iv;::l:v niiK-riioor brick, ;t::::--:t, oukcox city, okecox. Ts.CK & WELCH, f ::r) DENTISTS. OFFli.' K - In Odd Ft llmv' Temple, corner it' Fii-.-t and Al'K r Streets, Portland. Tl;.' i 1:1 ; hi' l!ine desiring superior !,'!.:: ":i is i:i spci'i::! i'e(net. S'Hrousox id !.- raiiilv-ss extraction of teeth. - ."Asii 1 i l: teeth "hotter than the best" Dec. 2:-.:t(- Dr. J, H. HATCH, O DENTIST, xfflS The pali ouage ofthose desiring first Clats L' i r.a'iOH, is respect fully solicited. S uUfactbm in all cases go.ar'anteed. X. !.:. X;?,--vi Osydc administered for the iunles.s Kxtraetion of Teeth. Oj'i'ics In W'eiant's new bntlding, west side oi First street, between Alder and Mor i iion st.-e-ts, Fortland, Oregon. LI vG and Let Live." n;LI)S & STK ICKLEK, DEALKIIS IN" P30VI3iaN3, GROCERIES, COi'NTUV PRODUCE, Sec, (MCl. WIXKS AND LIQUORS. ; "At the old stand of W-ortn;an & Fkdds Otegou Cit. , Oregon. 1 3t "y H. W ATKINS, M. D., " S UUP. EON. rourr.Axn, OuKOdi. Cirri' i: -Od.-l Fellows' Temple, corner Krst .111 1 l.ler streets Residence corner of M lin and Seventh streets. v7. F. HIGHFISLD, Established since IB 19, at the old stand, Mxin Street, Oregon, Cltrf, Ortgon. a n ;,irtmi'nt nf TV fitches. Jew- IN elry! and Scth Thomas' weight :-Ji'!vk5, allot wnicn are warrauueu to ha as represented -.'4 n A ,-inA nn short notice. (r- md thankful for past favors. CLAUK GREENMAU", GREG OX CITY. j delivery of mercha iukt of whatever de v.-o, All tn-der.s for the delivery of merchan dise or p-xeka res and freifflit of whatever des iriniio i. f any part of the city, willbeexe ; ite 1 promptly and with care. HW YOIiK HOTEL, ( Dentfehe? Gafthans,) N"a. 17 Fr nt Street, opposite the Mail steam ship landing, Portland, Oregon. H. E.0THF03, J. J. WILKENS, PROPRIETORS. q B vi rd per Week Jo 00 " li with Bodying d 00 " " Dav ". 1 00 11 AV ATTTVH's: ! n rss v F? S3 !nHa ! O H G O X IAN RUILDLNG, t orncr of Front ami Aller Street, PORTLAND, OREGON". BE VNK BOOKS RULED and BOUND to O ar.v dt-sired pattern. MFSiO BOOK. MAGAZINES. NEWS- PAiM-.ilS, Etc., bound in every variety of stve' known to the trade. 0"1 is from the countrv ixromptlv at ie.. !. -I to. 1 The Administration. f From the Washington Patriot. Ifn patient marked with erup tive disease were to wrap himself in a lute-string garment, or draw a gauze veil around his hideousness, it would not be more ineffectual and preposterous, than for this Ad ministration to delude itself by imagining that the filigree of its Anglican diplomacy conceals its general imbecility and wrong-doing. The historical student, "who has no party feeling or prcdjudice, but who, in the cause of truth, de sires to make up the record for posterity, looking at the lapse ot the last two years, as to which there was so much promise and so much expectation, will find no single thins? to signalize but this wretched, inetTeetual .British Treaty We challenge any partisan of the Administration to point out to ns an- other accomplished fact which it can boast of. What the value of the Treaty is, in our estimation,- theeaders of this journal are well aware, and we do not dwell on it further than to note that the latest reports from England show, a dif ficulty on its terms has already arisen, and that the British claims on ns, which, antecedently, no one in the country dreamed of are to are to be very considerably en larged. This, however, is entirely incidental. We are quite aware that its sup porters claim a merit in the reduc tion of the public debt some two hundred out of twenty-three hun dred millions. But this is done at the sacrifice of every other interest, and at a ruinous rate of taxation. If Grant and Boutwell should be continued in power, and the taxes be kept up on their present op pressive scale, the debt might be extinguished somewhere about 1000. Such is the cold comfort the country is offered. We incline to think that this generation of ours for before 1000 the mature men of to-day will be dead, and the vounir will be uettino; old would be rather better pleased to be made concious of an abatement of daily or yearly expenses in the form, of taxes ; of being able, if one has any money in a bank or saving-bank, to draw it out with out paying a tax of two cents for doing it; or, if he has none but what lie earns by the sweat of his brow, to get it without a stamped receipt. The tea and coffee of the healthy operative, and the quinine ibr his poor fever-stricken children, might 1k2 cheaper if there was not quite so much speed to gain ficti tious glory, and to liquidate an his torical debt, some ol" which, con sidering its results, certainly be longs to posterity. There is, however, another form of indebtedness floating about, as to which some unreasonable peo ple think something might be done. It consists of solemn promises of the Government to pay what are known as dollars, 8 Is, and -5s, and is0s the currency which poor men are paid their wages in. Nay, they arc more than that. It is made matter of necessity that every one to whom debt is due, be it much or be it little, must accept j these Government obligations as money. l ne vuniinistranon uou i care "about this homely debt. There is no spurious glorification in redeeming it. It rather suits the Government to keep its cur rency floating' We are very par ticular in sending coin abroad to the rich 'bankers in London and Frankfort for their interest, but. nobody seems to care how much the poor emigrant has to pay in ex change when he makes a remit tance to his old parents at home. The Administration has taken no steps Ui restore specie payments. Kao-s suit its policy better. SVe are aware too, that ''these people" have a great scheme for funding the debt at a lower rate of interest, by which the burthen of the annual interest was to be ever so much lightened. To effect this, every sort of machinery has been set in motion. Europe fairly bristles with our agencies ; and the result is absolute failure. The national banks, obedient min isters of Executive will, whose privileges are so valuable in other respects that they can afford to ac cept a lower rate of interest, have converted a small part of their se curities, and here, pretty much the tiling ends. Somo sixty millions out of the tremendous aggregate is the total of success, and we read in one of the best informed and most thoroughly devoted of the Administration presses that It is a fact that our national loan abroad is now held in less favor than is that of the new loan of France, with her empty treasury and crippled resources, and even a stable government threatened. But France's financial integrity is un oucstioncd, and hence her good credit. These, then, are the nnqnivocal triumphs which this Administra- tion claims. All the rest is abso- lute negation mere vacuity and for this impotence we primarially arraign it. Its positive nets of wrong form another chapter, which we may hereafter open. We pause now upon the postulate, the con ceded fact, that the Grant Admin istration, washed into power by an overpowering surge of excitement, has, in more 'than half its period of legitimate existence, literally done ZS'OTIIIXO ! "Tiie Bead Democracy-" The Kadcial papers and stump ers constantly telL us about tho dead Democracy. This has been dinned into our" ears for the past six or seven years. Nevertheless the party still lives, and just about this time gives its opponents a vast deal of trouble. In fact, thev themselves begin to find out their mistake, and that never before had they to contend against so united, vivacious a foe. We give a few specimens of this awakening sense on the part of our political enemies : The Democratic party is stronger than ever it was in its history. It means now to win, and I do not say that it cannot win, Horace (Jreeh'i 1 "icJcsbu'fy You make light of Democracy, but to-day, in the State of Xew York, there is a clean Democratic majority of ninety thousand. W. never did have the Irish, and now we are losing all the Germans. AT IT Tiwh (Radical.) What mania possesses this Rad ical party ? lam a Radical my self, but I am no ostrich, to run my head in the ground and think I am invisible. Too much stealing is death to us. Senator Coith'l.i u (Radical.) But two courses are ojen to all Americans who love the Republic They are to defeat Grant and elect some man who is not a soldier. Bayonets and the Constitution do not pull in the same harness. (Jitirhinaii Cornmcrritif. (Rad.) iiraiit, witli Ins ivu-lvlux T.'.. T.'l l.tll thinks he can kill the Democracy. It will take more men by a million than he had at Appomattox. A" V. Sun. (Rad.) A great deal has been said about the dead Democracy. Those who think it dead surely never read the history of the resurrect ion. There will be signs in the heavens and on the earth in 1872, when the Dem ocracy gets its soldiers in the field. Sjriiip'i Id (Mass.) jitjniblicai (Radical) He is a fool or traitor who ex pects to win an eas- victory over tiie Deniocr;:.! ;c Grant can never bayonet. Aec .1 l V party in Iti, do it with the Jc;7t Krc'idnfj 1)M. (Radical.) They may say what they please, but those who are most confident do not know these Democrats. They are the most dangerous when the;y seem the most whipped. Do not put any faith in them and do not trust them. In retreat they are treacherous and often fatal. Louis. llcpubUcan (Rad.) The Lee Monument at Lexington. It has been heretofore mentioned that the executive committee of the Lee Monument Association has adopted the design of Air. Val entine, a young Richmod artist of uncommon promise, who had been suggested by Airs. Lee for the pro posed monument to be erected to the memory of Gen. Lee, in the chapel of Washington College, at Lexington, Ya. 3Ir. Yalentine, ac companied by Col. J. J. White, cf Washington College, spent some days of last week at the St. Clair Hotel in this city, where the cast was seen and much admired by many of our citizens. The de sign comprises a plain sarcophagus on one side of which are the Yir ginia coat of arms, and the arms of the Lee family on the other. At the head is a plain Latin cross. At the foot, the name, Robert E. Lee. Upon the eouch, on the sar cophagus, is the great soldier, in a recumbent position of monumental effigies of the old knights, but in natural and graceful repose, as if in sleep. The likeness is admira ble. The military uniform is partly covered with drapery; one hand lies across his breast, as it was often observed in life ; the other, relaxed, just touches his fallen sword. The young artist has achieved a triumph. 3Irs. Lee has said that the design is faultless. It is enough to add that, in the ooiuion of all who have seen it, the woik is worthy its subject. Haiti mo re Sun. Long Faces. "Barber," said a farmer to his tonsor, "now corn's cheap you ought to shave for half 1 S -r.. T .G,I I price. "uu i Air. -joiie, .i the man of razors, "I ought really to charge more, for when corn's down farmers make such long faces ! that I have twice the ground to j go over. ! Wkll Dk scribed. Babies are i described as coupons attached to j the bonds of matrimony. 1 Sneering at ITewspapers. The power of the newspaper is beginning to be admitted by a majority of the intelligent people. But we doubt very much whether, even among this class of minds', there is anything like a proper re alization of the extent to which the newspaper press is to-day influ encing human opinion, changing customs, controlling polities, en couraging or retarding progress, aiding or injuring the church, blessing or crushing families, sav ing or destroying men. Yet there are found those who at times are not ashamed to display their ig norance or envy by decrying the press and sneering at newspapers. There are politicians whom some ill wind has carried into the legis lature, or perhaps to Congress, who will occasionally vent their spite against the newspapers by a sneer, although in point of real in lluence the average political editor out-weighs him a thousand times. Ministers of the Gospel have at times, been so indiscreet as to inti mate their low estimate of the re ligious press, forgetting that an editor of a religious paper, having a circulation of 15,000, address more people every week than the most popular of them will speak to in a life time. And once in a while Mr. Moneybags or Air. Land lord swelling with his self-importance, expresses the opinion that newspapers are not much account. "Yet the man who sits on the tripod of the country newspaper is a greater importance than all the rich men in the country. But if any of the parties to which we have referred have an ax to be ground any project to be advocated, how differently they act. Then the newspaper is the most important instrument of the day, ami the editor is just the finest fellow in the whole community. Smiles, bowings and kind words are showered upon the occupant of the editorial chair. But if he has been long in the service, he is not easily hoodwinked ; he will quickly read the whole man and discern his whole object. The truth is that no class of men expend so much unrequitted toil in behalf of educational and Immune institu tions, to promote public enterprises, and to advance the pecuniary in terests of individuals, as do the conductors of the public, press. The man who sneers at newspapers as of small account, must be one to whom, for some inscrutable reason, less than the usual amount of com mon sense has been given ; or one who, his demands having become altogether unbearable, has been snubbed in the editorial sanctum ; or one who has come into collision with some newspaper and been badly worsted ; or one who is only capable of envy because cf the power wielded by others ; or one who stands in daily dread of hav ing his own bitterness and mean ness exposed. Prcsbitijrbni Jian nrr. Novkx l)n:i.. An apothecaiy lately refused to resign his seat at a theatre in Vienna to an officer, who, feeling himself insulted, sent him a challenge. The apothecary was punctual at the meeting, but observed he had a new way of set tling the dispute. He then drew from his pocket a pill-box, and taking therefrom two pills, thus addressed his antagonist : "As a man of honor, sir, you would not wish me to fight on unequal terms. Here we are, therefore, two pills, one composed of the most deadly poison, the other perfectly harm less. We are, therefore, on equal grounds if we both swallow one. You shall take your choice, and I promise faithfully to take that which v'ou leave." . It is needless to say that the affair was settled by a hearty laugh. 'Mistakes. The following are a few of the mistakes which sug gest themselves to the publisher of a newspaper : It is a mistake to suppose that the subscription price of a paper is clear gain to the publisher. It is a mistake to suppase that he obtains his white paper for nothing. It is a mistake to suppose that printers can live bodily by fa'th. It is a mistake to suppose that it is easily to please everbody. It is a mistake to suppose that money due to the paper is as good to us in a year as it is now. It is a mistake to suppose that wc would not be thankful for what is due, as well as for new subscrib ers. The Radical papers are again beginning to talk about the 'De cay of Democracy." They arc whistling to keep their courage up, for it is certainly the liveliest cropse the Radicals ever saw. -- The Style-. In Wyoming, the bride furnishes the ring and the license, and the blushing bride groom falls into hysterics. COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY $.'.9,000,000 Tariff, on Shoes. In a paper protesting against the tariff on materials entering into the manufacture of shoes, in the Fnited States, the manufacturers to the number of some four hun dred say, "the combined tax upon all the articles forming the materi als of our industry yield the gov ernment a revenue of only :3,000, 000. while they impose upon the manufacturers' of boots and shoes a tax of 818,000,000 which must eventually be paid by the wearers of these necessary articles." These protectants represent the greater portion of the manufacturers of this country, and know whereof they speak. They farther say, "the legislation of our own country has driven our products from themar kets of Canada, Mexico, and the West Indies, and South America, which we have enjoyed for more than a century. It has transferred the manufacture of our products to a great degree to Canada, where it enjoys greater advantages, and is subject to fewer impediments in the prosecution of business." Thus to put ;,500,000 into the treasury, a sum equal to fifty cents per an num upon every human being in the United States is paid by the people ! Jirhtccn millloics oj' dol lars out of the people's pockets, and 8:,500,000 into the treasury of the government, and the result is, we are cut off from supplying countries which are the natural consumers of our products. Rut thus the Radicals will have it. St. Josipli Gazette. Croakers. An eccentric lawyer named Bur gess many years ago lived in Xew England village, and became quite famous for his "skeptical notions." Attending a town meeting, after its adjournment he lingered among the groups of substantial farmer deacons who composed it and lis tened to the prevailing conversa tion. The bad weather, the fly, the rot, and drought, and the wet were duly discussed, when some one turned to Burgess and a-ked, "How comes on your garden V "I never plant anything," replied Burgess with a solemn face, "I am afraid even to put a potato in the ground." "It's no wonder," groaned one of the persons present, "it's no wonder; for a man who disbelieves in revealed religion could not ex pect to have his labors blessed," "I am not afraid of failing in a reward for my work," replied Bur gess; "but I am afraid that agri cultural labor would make me pro fane. If I planted a single potato, what would be the result? Why I should get up in the morning, look about and say, 'It's going to rain, and 'twill ruin my potato' then I should in dry weather say: 'The drought will kill my potato,' then I should be unhappy because the 'rot' might destroy my potato; in fact gentlemen," concluded Bur gess in a solemn manner, "I should be afraid to to do anything that would induce me to constantly dis trust Providence." The reproof was deeply felt by man' present; and months after ward, the farmers, with a fear of Burgess before their eycr, talked of the blessings rather than ot the evils attending their daily labors. Go to Sleep Eaiily. Many children instead of being plump and fresh as a peach, are withered and wrinkled as last years's apples, because they do not sleep enough. Some physicians think that the b nes grow only during sleep. This I cannot say, certainly; but I do know that those little folks who sit up late at nights are usually nervous, weak, small, sickly. The reason you need more sleep than your parents is, because you have to grow and they do not. They can use up the food they eat in thinking, talking and walking, while you should save some of yours for growing. You ought to sleep a great deal; if you do not you will in activity consume all you eat, and have none, or not enough, to grow with. Very few smart children excel, or even equal, other people when they grow up. Why is this? Be cause their heads, if not their bodies, are kept too busy; so that they cannot sleep, rest and grow strong mi body and brain. Xow, when your mother savs Susie, or Georgie, or whatever your name may be, it is time to go to bed, do not worry her by begging to sit up "just a little longer." But hurry oft" to your chamber, remembering that you have a great deal of sleeping and growing to do to make you a healthy, happy, use- tui man or women. Tell Hnr. When a pickpocket pulls at your watch, tell him plainly that you have no time to spare. Good Toast. An Oregon toast over the ardent; "Here's what makes us wear old clothes." , r Going to Heaven from a Wood-shed. Mrs. Callender, of Delaware, and her husband were fully persuaded that on Wednesday of last week, the heavens were to resound with the trump of Gabriel, and they wcre to be caught up into the air together with the rest of mankind, ahead of whom they, however, de termined to get by being fully pre pared. There was little originality in their mode of preparation; as peo ple used to do when Millerism was epidemic, they prepared white robes for themselves, the same be ing night-clothes slightly altered. Early in the evening they arrayed themselves in these dresses, and sat quietly within doors until night came on, when thinking that jt would be easier to ascend from the roof of their wood-shed than up through the chimney of their house, they went thither, going up by means of a ladder. In mounting, the thought struck Mr. Callender that it would be as well to sew up their garments at the bottom, in case of adverse winds, and he re turned to the house for a needle and thread. Meantime his wife sat shivering on the roof and gaz ing at the stars as they rolled peacefully overhead. She'assisted her husband to mount the roof, and then sewed the dresses as he directed. There they sat for a while shivering in the cold and holding sweet converse. By some accident Airs. Callender slipped from her perch, and being unable to achieve voluntary motions by reason of her sewed dress, slid for a minute, and then rolled tranquil ly off the shed, falling about five feet to the ground. She screamed lustily for help, but she had fasten ed her husband in such a way that he could not come to her assistance for some little time; and when he had managed to free himself from the intolerable bonds, he made the best of his way down the ladder, and found his wife pretty badly hurt; so badly, indeed, that he had to ride for the doctor, who found the lady's ankle dislocated. The good people will probably stay in tiie house when next they wish to ascend, preferring to go aloft through the crooked flue of the chimney, rather than roll to the ground and go to heaven with broken shins. Don't Advertise. Don't do it. Don't advertise your business; its paying out your money to accommodate other peo ple; it they want to buy your goods, let them hunt you up. Don t advertise, for it gets your name abroad, and you are apt to be flooded with circulars from bus incss houses, and to be bored with "drummers" from city wholesale establishments, all of which also results in soliciting your order for new goods, and money to pay for them, which is very annoying to one of a dyspeptic temperament. Don t advertise, for it brings people in from the country, (and country folks you know are of an inquiring turn of mmd,) ami they will ask you many astonishing questions about prices, try your temper with showing them goods, and even vex you with the request to tie them up; which puts you to the additional trouble of buying more. Don't advertise; it gives people abroad a knowledge of your town, md they come and settle in it ; it will grow, and other business men will be induced to come in, and thus increase vour competition. In short, if you would have a quiet town, not too large; if you would not be harrassed bv multi- tudinous cares and perplexities of msiness; if you would avoid being bothered with paying for and los ing time to read a great cumber some newspaper, just-remain quiet; ion t let the people know five miles away where you are nor what you are doing, and you will be severely let alone to enjoy the bliss of undisturbed repose. A reliable exchange says that it knows of a boy who accidentlv swallowed a silver half dollar. They gave him warm water and tartar emetic and antimonial wine, and poked their fingers down his throat until the boy thought he would throw up his toe nails. After a while a doctor came along who understood such cases. He ad ministered a small dose of patent medicine, and in less than ten min utes the boy threw up the half dol lar in five-cent pieces. Science is great thing. No IIypkoi-iiobia. -vpnj sician of twenty-five years experience, in Louisville, expresses his disbcliei in the existence of what is known as hydrophobia. He asks any reli able physician who has ever seen an instance of it, to make a writ ten statement of the fact. Can a lover be called a suitor when he don't suit her? ft 1 Another Good Republican Witness 0 for the South, o W. II. Hunter, Radical Sheriff of Lowndes county, Alabama, has published a letter rebutting the slanders of the miscreants who say that "no Republican's life is safe in Alabama." Referring to that pestiferous class: hy do these fellows persist m misrepresenting our people? They must be manufacturing ammunition lor the "Ju-Klux Committee." While it is true that outrages have been committede-in various parts of our State, it is not triic that a Republican's life is not safe in this county. The Republican officers of this county are treatetl with the utmost kindness and civ ility by all classes of our citizens, and my duties as sheriff bringing me in contact with almost every one, I know whereof I speak. We have a population of 5,000 or 0,000 voters, and only one jail or calaboose in the county, and but one prisoner in jail. A murder was committed in our county a few days ago. Capt. Jesse Heard was killed by one Rahman, and I would not be sur prised to see his death announced by some of our sensational papers under a heading something like the following: "Another Ku-K lux Out- rage! A Prominent Republican Murdered ! ! ! Capt. Heard was a Confederate soldier and a Demo crat, but was beloved by all who knew him, irrespective of party. I believe that where the local officers (lie they Republicans or Democrats) do their official duties honestly, and treat the citizens with respect and kindness, there will be no trouble. I could raise a posse of five hundred of our best citizens to put down any violation of the law, whether by Ku-Kluk Klan, Union League, or Black Horse Cavalry. 0 Quantreil-Is lie Still Alive ? From the Lawreucc (Kansas) Standard A sort of mystery seems to over hang the fate of the famous gueril la chief, Quantrell. It has several times been reported that he perish ed near the close of the war, but nothing definite and certain has. ever been stated. He has good, reasons for concealing his move ments if living, and has heretofore done so. At different times, .how ever, reports have arisen and spread abroad to the effect that he was not dead, and we have good rea sons for belciving them to be true. Quantrell was seen in 1SG8 at the? White Pine silver mines, in Neva da. A prominent citizen of this city, about two months since, con versed with a resident of Fort Lyon, .Xew Mexico, who stated, that in 18G8 he met Quantrell at the White Pine silver mines. He was introduced to him as Quan trell, and talked to him of his ad ventures during the war and about the raid. Our informant vouches for the reliability of the gentleman, residing at Fort Lyon, from whom he received the statement given above. Its truth is confirmed by another party, Avho was in this cit about six weeks ago, and who also stated that he met Quantrell at the same place some time during the same year. These reports com ing from different quarters confirm each other. This information comes from perfectly reliable. sources, and would seem to indi cate that this noted raider had sur- vived the Avar, and is now some where m one of our estern Ter ritories. We simply crive the facts x .- as stated to us, vouching for noth ing out the renabillitv ot our in- formants, one of whom conversed, not long since, with a resident ot Fort Lyon, as we have stated. For G the present, we withhold names, although they can be given if de sired. Cah't I tun it Out. "Don't write there," said a hitherto a son, who was writing with a diamond on his window. "Why not?" . "Because you can't rub it out. Did it ever occur .to you child, that you are daily writing that which you can't rub out ? You made a"eruel speech to .your mother the other day." It wrote itself on her loving heart, and gave her oreat pain. It is there now, and hurts her every time she thinks of it. You can't rub it our. You wished a wicked thought one day in the ear of your playr mate. It wrote itself on his mmd and led him to It is there now do a wicked act. you can't rub it out. All your thoughts, all your words, all your acts are written in the book of God. Be careful The record is very lasting. You can't rub it out. -. -. Ciiaxce for a Poor Max. A man in Davenport, Iowa, offers, through tho columns of a local pa per to give 850 to any" man who will elope with his wife. v 0 O o Q O O o o o G o o o o o o o o o o . o 9.0 o o o o 0 o 0 o o o G O O o